"When I first lost my vision it was pretty traumatic," Tobia tells CNN Sport. "I had to stop working and things like that.

"Now I actually tell people that golf saved my life."

Mario Tobia (c) and coach Frank Hesson are proving "you don't have to see it to tee it."

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A Hands-on approach

Tobia regularly drives the ball over 240 yards — just 50 yards less than the PGA Tour average.

Typically scoring in the high 90s and low 100s in a casual round, the New Jersey native has shot as low as 86.

But, of course, he doesn't do it all alone.

Enter Frank Hesson, a golf coach with a difference.

"I'm Mario's guide," says Hesson. "Usually we'll get out to a golf course, go through a warm up program, just like anyone else would.

"Mario knows through his own practice how far he hits the ball with each of his golf clubs. Basically, he relies on me to give him some lie conditions.

"When he's ready, I grab the club and set it physically behind the golf ball. I tell him to open or close the club face, depending on whether it's lined up correctly.

"And then he says 'good?' and I say 'good!' and he goes off and takes the shot just like everybody else."

Muscle memory

It's moments like that which provide Tobia temporary escapism from his blindness -- brought on over the course of 25 years with a degenerative condition called Retinitis Pigmentosa.

"Blind golf gave me a goal and something I wanted to accomplish," he says. "With the help of my kids I started improving my game and, as time went on, I started seeking professional assistance with coaches like Frank.

"It's really changed my life and given me something to look forward to."

Mario Tobia typically scores in the high 90s, despite being completely blind.

While Tobia might not be able to gaze up at the trajectory of his ball, or watch as it rolls into the cup, the satisfaction of a sweetly-struck shot is a feeling shared by both player and coach.

"Wherever his ball lands, it's my job to visualize that," Hesson explains. "Some of the other players and other coaches look at us with their mouths wide open, but it's just something that he and I do together and both enjoy doing

"And it kind of crosses the Ts and dots the Is for us on the putting green."

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"Putting has always been a strength of mine, and I've retained that, even through losing my sight," says Tobia.

"Of course, I rely heavily on Frank now for the direction, and he takes care of the breaks and speed. But if we call it a 10-step putt, I know exactly how hard I have to swing for the ball to go 10 steps.

"Frank will make an adjustment and, if the green is a little downhill, he'll say 'putt it nine steps.' I've really got to trust that when I swing, the ball will be there. It's all about muscle memory."

"We have a funny anecdote," says Hesson. "When he makes a long one, I say 'it's all coach, it's all coach!'"

Real-time feedback

Technology has also come to Tobia's assistance in the form of the K-Vest, a wearable device that provides provide real-time audio and visual feedback on the golfer's posture and swing.

Training through feel, Tobia can work on his game from the comfort of his own home.

"The learning curve is so much quicker," he explains. "One of the biggest problems I have is Frank and I will work on something but then I won't see him for a week or so.

"I have a net in my backyard and a platform in front of it, all lined up. But when I practice there, I have no feedback from Frank, so before it wasn't uncommon for me to be out of sync with the motion all wrong by the time we next meet up.

"Now I get that feedback in real time. I could be in Pennsylvania and he could be in South Jersey, and we can still be communicating and doing the work."